Since the prophetic gifts are for
the real world, think of a real world person that’s going through some trouble,
someone you’ve been praying for recently. Write down their name.
Now look in the Spirit, and look
behind you. You see there a tall, oak, judge’s bench. Jesus is standing there,
smiling, waiting for you.
He takes you around to the far side
of the bench, and up the stairs behind it. But rather than sit down himself, Jesus
sits you in the great chair behind the bench. When you take your seat, you’re
find that you’re wearing black robes, and you have a wooden gavel in your right
hand. Are you wearing a white wig, too?
Take a moment, if you need to, to
deal with the emotions of being in a place like this. Ask him questions if you
need to, but don’t argue with him. This is your assignment today, if you choose
to accept it.
Now look out over the judge’s
bench. From your new vantage point, see your friend, whose name you wrote down.
Observe them for a minute as they go about their day. As you’re watching them,
let Jesus show you his love for them, his compassion for the crud they’re going
through. Rest there for a moment, feeling his heart for them.
Then Jesus reaches over and touches
your eyes. And now you can see more clearly from the bench, and with his help, you
begin to see the cloud of miserable, filthy, little spirits that have been
harassing your friend. Recognize their crimes, their trespasses, their
rebellions against their rightful king and against your friend.
Jesus leans over and whispers, “Judge
them!” Identify them, their names and their crimes. Recognize, by the Spirit
who’s in you, the name, the assignment, the work of one of the demons harassing
your friend. Speak that name out loud, and bang the gavel as you do name it.
Write it down if that helps.
Then watch what happens next. When
I did this, as I spoke the name, as I named each spirit, it was as if my gavel
moved on its own, gently tapping, “Guilty as charged” to each of my charges,
and with each tap, a beastie was bound. Soon, I got into it, reaching into my
spirit for the discernment of each spirit and shouting its name, its crime. The
gavel would bang and the demon was bound.
Look around. Do you see angels in
the courtroom? What do you see them doing? Consult with Jesus: what is his
counsel on the work you’re doing?
This isn’t a game. This is
literally life and death, but don’t interpret that to mean that you can’t enjoy
the work you’re doing. Get into the work. Reach deep within your spirit to
accurately name each spirit, and as you name it, watch as it’s snatched from
the air around your friend and bound. Observe what happens to it next, if that’s
revealed.
You may or may not have gotten to
each of the demons harassing your friend when you feel that you’re done, when
you feel the grace for this work lift, or when you hear Jesus say, “OK. That’s
enough for this time.” Don’t stay there beyond the grace for the work. Your
friend is destined to be an overcomer; they need something to overcome.
It helps me to go back through the session’s
work: declare your friend’s freedom, thank God for your friend’s freedom from
each of the spirits that you bound today. And when you’re done, perhaps as an
act of worship, burn the list: don’t keep a record of hell’s work in their
life.
Now, by my counsel, I’d recommend
that you don’t talk to them about this experience, not for a long, long time,
and this is for your benefit, not theirs. We tend to think, “Well, I bound up a
spirit of self-pity, so they won’t be falling into self-pity any more!” Yeah,
that’s not how it works.
If you bound the spirit of
self-pity, then that spirit of self-pity isn’t plying its trade in their life
any longer. But that doesn’t break years of self-pitying habits, or generations
of self-pitying traditions. It means that spirit isn’t working there any more, not that they’re perfect now.
And of course, don’t stop praying for your friend.